The Cambridge Quintet: A Work Of Scientific Speculation
Autor John L. Castien Limba Engleză Paperback – 23 apr 1999
In
this
narrative
tour
de
force,
gifted
scientist
and
author
John
L.
Casti
contemplates
an
imaginary
evening
of
intellectual
inquiry—a
sort
of
“My
Dinner
with”
not
Andre,
but
five
of
the
most
brilliant
thinkers
of
the
twentieth
century.Imagine,
if
you
will,
one
stormy
summer
evening
in
1949,
as
novelist
and
scientist
C.
P.
Snow,
Britain's
distinguished
wartime
science
advisor
and
author
ofThe
Two
Cultures,invites
four
singular
guests
to
a
sumptuous
seven-course
dinner
at
his
alma
mater,
Christ's
College,
Cambridge,
to
discuss
one
of
the
emerging
scientific
issues
of
the
day:
Can
we
build
a
machine
that
could
duplicate
human
cognitive
processes?
The
distinguished
guest
list
for
Snow's
dinner
consists
of
physicist
Erwin
Schrodinger,
inventor
of
wave
mechanics;
Ludwig
Wittgenstein,
the
famous
twentieth-century
philosopher
of
language,
who
posited
two
completely
contradictory
theories
of
human
thought
in
his
lifetime;
population
geneticist/science
popularizer
J.B.S.
Haldane;
and
Alan
Turing,
the
mathematician/codebreaker
who
formulated
the
computing
scheme
that
foreshadowed
the
logical
structure
of
all
modern
computers.
Capturing
not
only
their
unique
personalities
but
also
their
particular
stands
on
this
fascinating
issue,
Casti
dramatically
shows
what
each
of
these
great
men
might
have
argued
about
artificial
intelligence,
had
they
actually
gathered
for
dinner
that
midsummer
evening.With
Snow
acting
as
referee,
a
lively
intellectual
debate
unfolds.
Philosopher
Wittgenstein
argues
that
in
order
to
become
conscious,
a
machine
would
have
to
have
life
experiences
similar
to
those
of
human
beings—such
as
pain,
joy,
grief,
or
pleasure.
Biologist
Haldane
offers
the
idea
that
mind
is
a
separate
entity
from
matter,
so
that
regardless
of
how
sophisticated
the
machine,
only
flesh
can
bond
with
that
mysterious
force
called
intelligence.
Both
physicist
Schrodinger
and,
of
course,
computer
pioneer
Turing
maintain
that
it
is
not
the
substance,
but
rather
the
organization
of
that
substance,
that
makes
a
mind
conscious.With
great
verve
and
skill,
Casti
recreates
a
unique
and
thrilling
moment
of
time
in
the
grand
history
of
scientific
ideas.
Even
readers
who
have
already
formed
an
opinion
on
artificial
intelligence
will
be
forced
to
reopen
their
minds
on
the
subject
upon
reading
this
absorbing
narrative.
After
almost
four
decades,
the
solutions
to
the
epic
scientific
and
philosophical
problems
posed
over
this
meal
in
C.
P.
Snow's
old
rooms
at
Christ's
College
remains
tantalizingly
just
out
of
reach,
making
this
adventure
into
scientific
speculation
as
valid
today
as
it
was
in
1949.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780738201382
ISBN-10: 0738201383
Pagini: 208
Ilustrații: black & white illustrations
Dimensiuni: 151 x 232 x 7 mm
Greutate: 0.32 kg
Editura: BASIC BOOKS
Colecția Basic Books
Locul publicării:United States
ISBN-10: 0738201383
Pagini: 208
Ilustrații: black & white illustrations
Dimensiuni: 151 x 232 x 7 mm
Greutate: 0.32 kg
Editura: BASIC BOOKS
Colecția Basic Books
Locul publicării:United States
Notă biografică
John L. Casti, a member of the faculty of both the Santa Fe Institute and the Technical Unviersity of Vienna, has written numerous acclaimed popular scinece books, including Would-be Worlds, Five Golden Rules, and The Cambridge Quintet.